Mini-Holland design guide plugs local-born creator of modern bicycle

Walthamstow’s new Mini-Holland Design Guide highlights the fact that the father of the modern bicycle was born in the borough. John Kemp Starley was the creator of the 1885 Safety bicycle which is the archetype for almost all of today’s bicycles. Born in Church Hill, Walthamstow in 1854, Starley’s creation of the Rover Safety bicycle led to a 1890s bicycle boom, with the Rover Safety bicycle exported around the world, and much copied.

The 68-page cycle infrastructure guide – which will prove useful around the UK – points out that there are no plaques or other commemorations of Starley in his home borough, and stresses that it’s necessary to “raise the profile of this great innovator.”

Bicycle industry figures from around the world have previously heaped praise on Walthamstow’s forgotten son. Italian bicycle manufacturer Ernesto Colnago said: “All modern-day bicycle designers owe a huge debt to J. K. Starley and his vision. Starley’s stroke of genius is an inspiration to us.”

Bicycle Association executive director Phillip Darnton said:

“The worldwide accessibility and popularity of cycling is due, in large part, to the work of J. K. Starley in the late 19th Century. His Rover Safety revolutionised not just the bicycle but the world. The billions of bicycles made since 1885 can trace their ancestry back to that original ground-breaking machine.”